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MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of
the Court.
Roe v. Wade
Court
Cases Index
Roe v. Wade Syllabus
Court's Opinion, Justice Blackmun Part 1
Court's Opinion, Justice Blackmun Part 2
Court's
Opinion, Justice Blackmun Part 3
Court's Opinion, Justice Blackmun Part 4
Chief Justice Burger's concurring opinion
Justice Stewart's concurring opinion
Justice Douglas' concurring opinion
Justices White's dissenting opinion
Justice Rehnquist's dissenting opinion
This Texas federal appeal and its Georgia companion, Doe v. Bolton,
post, p. 179, present constitutional challenges to state criminal abortion legislation.
The Texas statutes under attack here are typical of those that have been in effect in many
States for approximately a century. The Georgia statutes, in contrast, have a modern cast
and are a legislative product that, to an extent at least, obviously reflects the
influences of recent attitudinal change, of advancing medical knowledge and techniques,
and of new thinking about an old issue.
We forthwith acknowledge our awareness of the sensitive and
emotional nature of the abortion controversy, of the vigorous opposing views, even among
physicians, and of the deep and seemingly absolute convictions that the subject inspires.
One's philosophy, one's experiences, one's exposure to the raw edges of human existence,
one's religious training, one's attitudes toward life and family and their values, and the
moral standards one establishes and seeks to observe, are all likely to influence and to
color one's thinking and conclusions about abortion.
In addition, population growth, pollution, poverty, and racial
overtones tend [**709] to complicate and not to simplify the problem.
Our task, of course, is to resolve the issue by constitutional
measurement, free of emotion and of predilection. We seek earnestly to do this, and,
because we do, we [*117] have inquired into, and in this opinion place some emphasis upon,
medical and medical-legal history and what that history reveals about man's attitudes
toward the abortion procedure over the centuries. We bear in mind, too, Mr. Justice
Holmes' admonition in his now-vindicated dissent in Lochner v. New York, 198 U.S. 45, 76
(1905):
"[The Constitution] is made for people of fundamentally
differing views, and the accident of our finding certain opinions natural and familiar or
novel and even shocking ought not to conclude our judgment upon the question whether
statutes embodying them conflict with the Constitution of the United States."
I
The Texas statutes that concern us here are Arts. 1191-1194 and 1196
of the State's Penal Code. n1 These make it a crime to "procure an abortion," as
therein [*118] defined, or to attempt one, except with respect to "an abortion
procured or attempted by medical advice for the purpose of saving the life of the
mother." Similar statutes are in existence in a majority of the States. n2
==========Begin Footnotes==========
n1 "Article 1191. Abortion
"If any person shall designedly administer to a pregnant woman
or knowingly procure to be administered with her consent any drug or medicine, or shall
use towards her any violence or means whatever externally or internally applied, and
thereby procure an abortion, he shall be confined in the penitentiary not less than two
nor more than five years; if it be done without her consent, the punishment shall be
doubled. By 'abortion' is meant that the life of the fetus or embryo shall be destroyed in
the woman's womb or that a premature birth thereof be caused.
"Art. 1192. Furnishing the means
"Whoever furnishes the means for procuring an abortion knowing
the purpose intended is guilty as an accomplice.
"Art. 1193. Attempt at abortion
"If the means used shall fail to produce an abortion, the
offender is nevertheless guilty of an attempt to produce abortion, provided it be shown
that such means were calculated to produce that result, and shall be fined not less than
one hundred nor more than one thousand dollars.
"Art. 1194. Murder in producing abortion
"If the death of the mother is occasioned by an abortion so
produced or by an attempt to effect the same it is murder."
"Art. 1196. By medical advice
"Nothing in this chapter applies to an abortion procured or
attempted by medical advice for the purpose of saving the life of the mother."
The foregoing Articles, together with Art. 1195, compose Chapter 9
of Title 15 of the Penal Code. Article 1195, not attacked here, reads:
"Art. 1195. Destroying unborn child
"Whoever shall during parturition of the mother destroy the
vitality or life in a child in a state of being born and before actual birth, which child
would otherwise have been born alive, shall be confined in the penitentiary for life or
for not less than five years."
n2 Ariz. Rev. Stat. Ann. ' 13-211 (1956); Conn. Pub. Act No. 1 (May
1972 special session) (in 4 Conn. Leg. Serv. 677 (1972)), and Conn. Gen. Stat. Rev. ''
53-29, 53-30 (1968) (or unborn child); Idaho Code ' 18-601 (1948); Ill. Rev. Stat., c. 38,
' 23-1 (1971); Ind. Code ' 35-1-58-1 (1971); Iowa Code ' 701.1 (1971); Ky. Rev. Stat. '
436.020 (1962); La. Rev. Stat. ' 37:1285 (6) (1964) (loss of medical license) (but see '
14:87 (Supp. 1972) containing no exception for the life of the mother under the criminal
statute); Me. Rev. Stat. Ann., Tit. 17, ' 51 (1964); Mass. Gen. Laws Ann., c. 272, ' 19
(1970) (using the term "unlawfully," construed to exclude an abortion to save
the mother's life, Kudish v. Bd. of Registration, 356 Mass. 98, 248 N. E. 2d 264 (1969));
Mich. Comp. Laws ' 750.14 (1948); Minn. Stat. ' 617.18 (1971); Mo. Rev. Stat. ' 559.100
(1969); Mont. Rev. Codes Ann. ' 94-401 (1969); Neb. Rev. Stat. ' 28-405 (1964); Nev. Rev.
Stat. ' 200.220 (1967); N. H. Rev. Stat. Ann. ' 585:13 (1955); N. J. Stat. Ann. ' 2A:87-1
(1969) ("without lawful justification"); N. D. Cent. Code '' 12-25-01, 12-25-02
(1960); Ohio Rev. Code Ann. ' 2901.16 (1953); Okla. Stat. Ann., Tit. 21, ' 861 (1972-1973
Supp.); Pa. Stat. Ann., Tit. 18, '' 4718, 4719 (1963) ("unlawful"); R. I. Gen.
Laws Ann. ' 11-3-1 (1969); S. D. Comp. Laws Ann. ' 22-17-1 (1967); Tenn. Code Ann. ''
39-301, 39-302 (1956); Utah Code Ann. '' 76-2-1, 76-2-2 (1953); Vt. Stat. Ann., Tit. 13, '
101 (1958); W. Va. Code Ann. ' 61-2-8 (1966); Wis. Stat. ' 940.04 (1969); Wyo. Stat. Ann.
'' 6-77, 6-78 (1957).
==========End Footnotes==========
[*119] Texas [**710] first enacted a criminal abortion statute in
1854. Texas Laws 1854, c. 49, ' 1, set forth in 3 H. Gammel, Laws of Texas 1502 (1898).
This was soon modified into language that has remained substantially unchanged to the
present time. See Texas Penal Code of 1857, c. 7, Arts. 531-536; G. Paschal, Laws of
Texas, Arts. 2192-2197 (1866); Texas Rev. Stat., c. 8, Arts. 536-541 (1879); Texas Rev.
Crim. Stat., Arts. 1071-1076 (1911). The final article in each of these compilations
provided the same exception, as does the present Article 1196, for an abortion by
"medical advice for the purpose of saving the life of the mother." n3
==========Begin Footnotes==========
n3 Long ago, a suggestion was made that the Texas statutes were
unconstitutionally vague because of definitional deficiencies. The Texas Court of Criminal
Appeals disposed of that suggestion peremptorily, saying only,
"It is also insisted in the motion in arrest of judgment that
the statute is unconstitutional and void in that it does not sufficiently define or
describe the offense of abortion. We do not concur in respect to this question."
Jackson v. State, 55 Tex. Cr. R. 79, 89, 115 S. W. 262, 268 (1908).
The same court recently has held again that the State's abortion
statutes are not unconstitutionally vague or overbroad. Thompson v. State (Ct. Crim. App.
Tex. 1971), appeal docketed, No. 71-1200. The court held that "the State of Texas has
a compelling interest to protect fetal life"; that Art. 1191 "is designed to
protect fetal life"; that the Texas homicide statutes, particularly Art. 1205 of the
Penal Code, are intended to protect a person "in existence by actual birth" and
thereby implicitly recognize other human life that is not "in existence by actual
birth"; that the definition of human life is for the legislature and not the courts;
that Art. 1196 "is more definite than the District of Columbia statute upheld in
[United States v.] Vuitch" (402 U.S. 62); and that the Texas statute "is not
vague and indefinite or overbroad." A physician's abortion conviction was affirmed.
In Thompson, n. 2, the court observed that any issue as to the
burden of proof under the exemption of Art. 1196 "is not before us." But see
Veevers v. State, 172 Tex. Cr. R. 162, 168-169, 354 S. W. 2d 161, 166-167 (1962). Cf.
United States v. Vuitch, 402 U.S. 62, 69-71 (1971).
==========End Footnotes==========
[*120]
II
Jane Roe, n4 a single woman who was residing in Dallas County,
Texas, instituted this federal action in March 1970 against the District Attorney of the
county. She sought a declaratory judgment that the Texas criminal abortion statutes were
unconstitutional on their face, and an injunction restraining the defendant from enforcing
the statutes.
==========Begin Footnotes==========
n4 The name is a pseudonym.
==========End Footnotes==========
Roe alleged that she was unmarried and pregnant; that she wished to
terminate her pregnancy by an abortion "performed by a competent, licensed physician,
under safe, clinical conditions"; that she was unable to get a "legal"
abortion in Texas because her life did not appear to be threatened by the continuation of
her pregnancy; and that she could not afford to travel to another jurisdiction in order to
secure a legal abortion under safe conditions. She claimed that the Texas statutes were
unconstitutionally vague and that they abridged her right of personal privacy, protected
by the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and Fourteenth Amendments. By an amendment to her
complaint Roe purported to sue "on behalf of herself and all other women"
similarly situated.
James Hubert Hallford, a licensed physician, sought and was granted
leave to intervene in Roe's action. In his complaint he alleged that he had been arrested
previously for violations of the Texas abortion statutes and [*121] that two such
prosecutions were pending against him. He described conditions of patients who came to him
seeking abortions, and he claimed that for many cases he, as a physician, was unable to
determine [**711] whether they fell within or outside the exception recognized by Article
1196. He alleged that, as a consequence, the statutes were vague and uncertain, in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment, and that they violated his own and his patients'
rights to privacy in the doctor-patient relationship and his own right to practice
medicine, rights he claimed were guaranteed by the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth, and
Fourteenth Amendments.
John and Mary Doe, n5 a married couple, filed a companion complaint
to that of Roe. They also named the District Attorney as defendant, claimed like
constitutional deprivations, and sought declaratoryand injunctive relief. The Does alleged
that they were a childless couple; that Mrs. Doe was suffering from a
"neural-chemical" disorder; that her physician had "advised her to avoid
pregnancy until such time as her condition has materially improved" (although a
pregnancy at the present time would not present "a serious risk" to her life);
that, pursuant to medical advice, she had discontinued use of birth control pills; and
that if she should become pregnant, she would want to terminate the pregnancy by an
abortion performed by a competent, licensed physician under safe, clinical conditions. By
an amendment to their complaint, the Does purported to sue "on behalf of themselves
and all couples similarly situated."
==========Begin Footnotes==========
n5 These names are pseudonyms.
==========End Footnotes==========
The two actions were consolidated and heard together by a duly
convened three-judge district court. The suits thus presented the situations of the
pregnant single woman, the childless couple, with the wife not pregnant, [*122] and the
licensed practicing physician, all joining in the attack on the Texas criminal abortion
statutes. Upon the filing of affidavits, motions were made for dismissal and for summary
judgment. The court held that Roe and members of her class, and Dr. Hallford, had standing
to sue and presented justiciable controversies, but that the Does had failed to allege
facts sufficient to state a present controversy and did not have standing. It concluded
that, with respect to the requests for a declaratory judgment, abstention was not
warranted. On the merits, the District Court held that the "fundamental right of
single women and married persons to choose whether to have children is protected by the
Ninth Amendment, through the Fourteenth Amendment," and that the Texas criminal
abortion statutes were void on their face because they were both unconstitutionally vague
and constituted an overbroad infringement of the plaintiffs' Ninth Amendment rights. The
court then held that abstention was warranted with respect to the requests for an
injunction. It therefore dismissed the Does' complaint, declared the abortion statutes
void, and dismissed the application for injunctive relief. 314 F.Supp. 1217, 1225 (ND Tex.
1970).
The plaintiffs Roe and Doe and the intervenor Hallford, pursuant to
28 U. S. C. ' 1253, have appealed to this Court from that part of the District Court's
judgment denying the injunction. The defendant District Attorney has purported to
cross-appeal, pursuant to the same statute, from the court's grant of declaratory relief
to Roe and Hallford. Both sides also have taken protective appeals to the United States
Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. That court ordered the appeals held in abeyance
pending decision here. We postponed decision on jurisdiction to the hearing on the merits.
402 U.S. 941 (1971).
[*123]
III
It might have been preferable if the defendant, pursuant to our Rule
20, had presented to us a petition for certiorari before judgment in the Court of Appeals
with respect to the granting of the plaintiffs' prayer for declaratory relief. Our
decisions in Mitchell v. Donovan, 398 U.S. 427 (1970), and Gunn v. University Committee,
399 U.S. 383 [**712] (1970), are to the effect that ' 1253 does not authorize an appeal to
this Court from the grant or denial of declaratory relief alone. We conclude,
nevertheless, that those decisions do not foreclose our review of both the injunctive and
the declaratory aspects of a case of this kind when it is properly here, as this one is,
on appeal under ' 1253 from specific denial of injunctive relief, and the arguments as to
both aspects are necessarily identical. See Carter v. Jury Comm'n, 396 U.S. 320 (1970);
Florida Lime Growers v. Jacobsen, 362 U.S. 73, 80-81 (1960). It would be destructive of
time and energy for all concerned were we to rule otherwise. Cf. Doe v. Bolton, post, p.
179.
IV
We are next confronted with issues of justiciability, standing, and
abstention. Have Roe and the Does established that "personal stake in the outcome of
the controversy," Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 204 (1962), that insures that
"the dispute sought to be adjudicated will be presented in an adversary context and
in a form historically viewed as capable of judicial resolution," Flast v. Cohen, 392
U.S. 83, 101 (1968), and Sierra Club v. Morton, 405 U.S. 727, 732 (1972)? And what effect
did the pendency of criminal abortion charges against Dr. Hallford in state court have
upon the propriety of the federal court's granting relief to him as a
plaintiff-intervenor? [*124] A. Jane Roe. Despite the use of the pseudonym, no suggestion
is made that Roe is a fictitious person. For purposes of her case, we accept as true, and
as established, her existence; her pregnant state, as of the inception of her suit in
March 1970 and as late as May 21 of that year when she filed an alias affidavit with the
District Court; and her inability to obtain a legal abortion in Texas.
Viewing Roe's case as of the time of its filing and thereafter until
as late as May, there can be little dispute that it then presented a case or controversy
and that, wholly apart from the class aspects, she, as a pregnant single woman thwarted by
the Texas criminal abortion laws, had standing to challenge those statutes. Abele v.
Markle, 452 F.2d 1121, 1125 (CA2 1971); Crossen v. Breckenridge, 446 F.2d 833, 838-839
(CA6 1971); Poe v. Menghini, 339 F.Supp. 986, 990-991 (Kan. 1972). See Truax v. Raich, 239
U.S. 33 (1915). Indeed, we do not read the appellee's brief as really asserting anything
to the contrary. The "logical nexus between the status asserted and the claim sought
to be adjudicated," Flast v. Cohen, 392 U.S., at 102, and the necessary degree of
contentiousness, Golden v. Zwickler, 394 U.S. 103 (1969), are both present.
The appellee notes, however, that the record does not disclose that
Roe was pregnant at the time of the District Court hearing on May 22, 1970, n6 or on the
following June 17 when the court's opinion and judgment were filed. And he suggests that
Roe's case must now be moot because she and all other members of her class are no longer
subject to any 1970 pregnancy.
==========Begin Footnotes==========
n6 The appellee twice states in his brief that the hearing before
the District Court was held on July 22, 1970. Brief for Appellee 13. The docket entries,
App. 2, and the transcript, App. 76, reveal this to be an error. The July date appears to
be the time of the reporter's transcription. See App. 77.
==========End Footnotes==========
[*125] The usual rule in federal cases is that an actual controversy
must exist at stages of appellate or certiorari review, and not simply at the date the
action is initiated. United States v. Munsingwear, Inc., 340 U.S. 36 [**713] (1950);
Golden v. Zwickler, supra; SEC v. Medical Committee for Human Rights, 404 U.S. 403 (1972).
But when, as here, pregnancy is a significant fact in the
litigation, the normal 266-day human gestation period is so short that the pregnancy will
come to term before the usual appellate process is complete. If that termination makes a
case moot, pregnancy litigation seldom will survive much beyond the trial stage, and
appellate review will be effectively denied. Our law should not be that rigid. Pregnancy
often comes more than once to the same woman, and in the general population, if man is to
survive, it will always be with us. Pregnancy provides a classic justification for a
conclusion of nonmootness. It truly could be "capable of repetition, yet evading
review." Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. ICC, 219 U.S. 498, 515 (1911). See Moore v.
Ogilvie, 394 U.S. 814, 816 (1969);Carroll v. Princess Anne, 393 U.S. 175, 178-179 (1968);
United States v. W. T. Grant Co., 345 U.S. 629, 632-633 (1953).
We, therefore, agree with the District Court that Jane Roe had
standing to undertake this litigation, that she presented a justiciable controversy, and
that the termination of her 1970 pregnancy has not rendered her case moot.
B. Dr. Hallford. The doctor's position is different. He entered
Roe's litigation as a plaintiff-intervenor, alleging in his complaint that he:
"In the past has been arrested for violating the Texas Abortion
Laws and at the present time stands charged by indictment with violating said laws in the
Criminal District Court of Dallas County, Texas to-wit: (1) The State of Texas vs. [*126]
James H. Hallford, No. C-69-5307-IH, and (2) The State of Texas vs. James H. Hallford, No.
C-69-2524-H. In both cases the defendant is charged with abortion . . . ."
In his application for leave to intervene, the doctor made like
representations as to the abortion charges pending in the state court. These
representations were also repeated in the affidavit he executed and filed in support of
his motion for summary judgment.
Dr. Hallford is, therefore, in the position of seeking, in a federal
court, declaratory and injunctive relief with respect to the same statutes under which he
stands charged in criminal prosecutions simultaneously pending in state court. Although he
stated that he has been arrested in the past for violating the State's abortion laws, he
makes no allegation of any substantial and immediate threat to any federally protected
right that cannot be asserted in his defense against the state prosecutions. Neither is
there any allegation of harassment or bad-faith prosecution. In order to escape the rule
articulated in the cases cited in the next paragraph of this opinion that, absent
harassment and bad faith, a defendant in a pending state criminal case cannot
affirmatively challenge in federal court the statutes under which the State is prosecuting
him, Dr. Hallford seeks to distinguish his status as a present state defendant from his
status as a "potential future defendant" and to assert only the latter for
standing purposes here.
We see no merit in that distinction. Our decision in Samuels v.
Mackell, 401 U.S. 66 (1971),compels the conclusion that the District Court erred when it
granted declaratory relief to Dr. Hallford instead of refraining from so doing. The court,
of course, was correct in refusing to grant injunctive relief to the doctor. The reasons
supportive of that action, however, are those expressed in Samuels v. Mackell, supra, and
in Younger v. [*127] Harris, 401 U.S. 37 (1971); Boyle v. Landry, 401 U.S. 77 [**714]
(1971); Perez v. Ledesma, 401 U.S. 82 (1971); and Byrne v. Karalexis, 401 U.S. 216 (1971).
See also Dombrowski v. Pfister, 380 U.S. 479 (1965). We note, in passing, that Younger and
its companion cases were decided after the three-judge District Court decision in this
case.
Dr. Hallford's complaint in intervention, therefore, is to be
dismissed. n7 He is remitted to his defenses in the state criminal proceedings against
him. We reverse the judgment of the District Court insofar as it granted Dr. Hallford
relief and failed to dismiss his complaint in intervention.
==========Begin Footnotes==========
n7 We need not consider what different result, if any, would follow
if Dr. Hallford's intervention were on behalf of a class. His complaint in intervention
does not purport to assert a class suit and makes no reference to any class apart from an
allegation that he "and others similarly situated" must necessarily guess at the
meaning of Art. 1196. His application for leave to intervene goes somewhat further, for it
asserts that plaintiff Roe does not adequately protect the interest of the doctor
"and the class of people who are physicians . . . [and] the class of people who are .
. . patients . . . ." The leave application, however, is not the complaint. Despite
the District Court's statement to the contrary, 314 F.Supp., at 1225, we fail to perceive
the essentials of a class suit in the Hallford complaint.
==========End Footnotes==========
C. The Does. In view of our ruling as to Roe's standing in her case,
the issue of the Does' standing in their case has little significance. The claims they
assert are essentially the same as those of Roe, and they attack the same statutes.
Nevertheless, we briefly note the Does' posture.
Their pleadings present them as a childless married couple, the
woman not being pregnant, who have no desire to have children at this time because of
their having received medical advice that Mrs. Doe should avoid pregnancy, and for
"other highly personal reasons." But they "fear . . . they may face the
prospect of becoming [*128] parents." And if pregnancy ensues, they "would want
to terminate" it by an abortion. They assert an inability to obtain an abortion
legally in Texas and, consequently, the prospect of obtaining an illegal abortion there or
of going outside Texas to some place where the procedure could be obtained legally and
competently.
We thus have as plaintiffs a married couple who have, as their
asserted immediate and present injury, only an alleged "detrimental effect upon
[their] marital happiness" because they are forced to "the choice of refraining
from normal sexual relations or of endangering Mary Doe's health through a possible
pregnancy." Their claim is that sometime in the future Mrs. Doe might become pregnant
because of possible failure of contraceptive measures, and at that time in the future she
might want an abortion that might then be illegal under the Texas statutes.
This very phrasing of the Does' position reveals its speculative
character. Their alleged injury rests on possible future contraceptive failure, possible
future pregnancy, possible future unpreparedness for parenthood, and possible future
impairment of health. Any one or more of these several possibilities may not take place
and all may not combine. In the Does' estimation, these possibilities might have some real
or imagined impact upon their marital happiness. But we are not prepared to say that the
bare allegation of so indirect an injury is sufficient to present an actual case or
controversy. Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S., at 41-42; Golden v. Zwickler, 394 U.S., at
109-110; Abele v. Markle, 452 F.2d, at 1124-1125; Crossen v. Breckenridge, 446 F.2d, at
839. The Does' claim falls far short of those resolved otherwise in the cases that the
Does urge upon us, namely, Investment Co. Institute v. Camp, 401 U.S. 617 (1971); Data
Processing Service v. Camp, 397 U.S. 150 [**715] (1970); [*129] and Epperson v. Arkansas,
393 U.S. 97 (1968). See also Truax v. Raich, 239 U.S. 33 (1915).
The Does therefore are not appropriate plaintiffs in this
litigation. Their complaint was properly dismissed by the District Court, and we affirm
that dismissal.
Roe v. Wade
Court
Cases Index
Roe v. Wade Syllabus
Court's Opinion, Justice Blackmun Part 1
Court's Opinion, Justice Blackmun Part 2
Court's
Opinion, Justice Blackmun Part 3
Court's Opinion, Justice Blackmun Part 4
Chief Justice Burger's concurring opinion
Justice Stewart's concurring opinion
Justice Douglas' concurring opinion
Justices White's dissenting opinion
Justice Rehnquist's dissenting opinion
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